Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers made 51 line-item vetoes to the 2023-25 biennial state budget before signing it on July 5. The two-year budget totals $103.8 billion and, among other things, increases support to local communities, invests more than $1 billion in public education, makes one of the largest state investments in workforce housing, invests in infrastructure and supports Wisconsin agriculture.
Specifically for agriculture, the 2023-25 biennial state budget continues funding for agricultural producer-led groups that focus on pollution abatement activities through the Producer-Led Watershed Protection Grant Program, and adds funding to incentivize practices to protect natural resources, including increasing funding for crop insurance, premium rebates for cover crops and farmer-led nitrate optimization grants.
The budget, which the governor signed into law, continues the Wisconsin Commodity Food Bank Purchasing Program and provides additional funding for critical animal disease outbreak prevention and traceability. The budget also provides support for the Dairy Processor Grant Program to match industry demand for innovation and development grants.
It provides funding for county conservation staff, which are critical to implementing and maintaining state conservation and agricultural programs, and support to increase exportation of agricultural products such as dairy, meat, crops and other Wisconsin commodities through the Wisconsin Initiative for Agricultural Exports.
And last but not least, the budget provides opportunities for the development of new cooperatives or the conversion of existing businesses to the cooperative model, expansion of the Farmland Preservation Planning Grant Program and funding for the Agricultural Nonpoint Source Pollution Program.
Source: farmprogress.com
Photo Credit: gettyimages-jimfeng
Categories: Wisconsin, Government & Policy